AvailablityUsually ships within five business days.ArtistRon ScottCollectionCayman

Description 'This was the most spectacular sunrise that I've seen in my life!'

'At first I was bummed because it was a cloudy morning and we'd got up there before daybreak. Then, I realized that the sun was going to pass directly behind that large hole in the clouds. Looking at the results of this photo-shoot made the hair stand up on the back of my neck because the sky was so beautiful. I couldn't choose 1 print to offer so I had to offer 3.' Ron went on to say, 'I hope that people will see these pictures and long to take in a sunrise at the Bluff in the Brac.'

Ron Scott has been enjoying the hobby of photography for many years. He has photographed the Cayman Islands, Jamaica, Northern Alabama, Las Vegas, and Massachusetts.

Ron has been traveling to the Cayman Islands for many years to visit a large part of his family that lives and works there so he understands the people and the culture and takes great pride in only offering the very best, of the approximately 1500 photographs he has taken, for sale here.

"One time I was standing in a photo lab store signing some of my pictures that were going into an art gallery in Grand Cayman. A gentleman approached me and wanted to talk about my work. I assumed, wrongly, that he was going to ask me boring questions about what kind of camera I used or what f-stop I used for the photograph. I don't really enjoy talking about that kind of detail because I want the work to speak its own language and not of the technical details. However, this man asked me a question that I couldn't readily answer. He said, 'How do you get those amazing angles in your photographs?' I had to think about this for a moment because I was just thinking, 'I aim and shoot...' There is a method to my picture taking that I took for granted was easily understood but apparently it's not. For some of my shots, not all of them, I literally lay down on the ground and point the camera slightly in an upward direction. This gives the subconscious appearance to the person looking at the photograph that she could walk into the picture as if it's a part of her own environment." Ron Scott, January 2007